Cowhage

The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • noun. The hairs of the pods of a leguminous plant, Mucuna pruriens. The pod is covered with a thick coating of short, stiff, brittle brown hairs, which are retrorsely serrate toward the top. They easily penetrate the skin, and produce an intolerable itching. They are employed medicinally as a mechanical vermifuge.
  • noun. The entire pods of M. pruriens.
  • noun. The plant itself.
  • noun. In the West Indies, a euphorbiaceous shrub, Acidoton urens, bearing capsules covered with stinging hairs. The twining cowhage of the same region is a woody climber of the same order, Tragia volubilis, with hispid capsules.
  • the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
  • noun. A leguminous climbing plant of the genus Mucuna, having crooked pods covered with sharp hairs, which stick to the fingers, causing intolerable itching. The spiculæ are sometimes used in medicine as a mechanical vermifuge.
  • Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
  • noun. Alternative form of cowage.
  • Word Usage
    "The researchers rubbed roughly the same number of cowhage spicules the itch-inducing spiky bits of that plant, also known as velvet bean on three locations: the front of the ankle; on the underside of the forearm; and under the shoulder blade on the back."
    cross-reference
    variant
    couhage  cowage  cowitch